Nigeria: Good times and bad times Print E-mail
Written by Levi Obijiofor   
Friday, 18 July 2008

Nigeria: Good times and bad times 

By Levi Obijiofor 

Friday, 18 July 2008 

I ran into a young American woman – an anaesthetist to be precise – two weeks ago. Our meeting appeared to have been pre-determined to occur.  I was in hospital for a pre-operation appointment. She was the anaesthetist assigned to interview me days ahead of a scheduled appointment to repair an umbilical hernia. As soon as she opened my file, the woman asked politely whether I was from Nigeria. I didn’t know whether to respond or ignore the question. I wondered what my country of origin had to do with my hospital appointment. In hindsight, it was good that I answered her question because my response triggered off an insightful narration of the good and bad times in Nigeria from the perspective of a foreigner.  

The woman said she was born in Nigeria and spent her childhood years in Lagos. She recalled with nostalgia the glorious years her family lived and worked in Nigeria. She spoke about her passion for “suya” and she asked whether the “suya” spots that illuminated evening life in various parts of Lagos still operated in light of growing insecurity in Nigeria. Her father, she mentioned, worked for Shell oil company for more than 20 years. And then came the hard part of our discussion.  

I was inundated with soul-searching questions. “What has happened to Nigeria? Why did a country so blessed squander so much wealth and gamble away many opportunities in so short a time? Why did Nigeria spit out a great opportunity to become a world leader?” She narrated how her father, now in retirement in the United States, sheds tears whenever he reads reports of instability, abductions, armed robbery, and growing poverty in Nigeria.   

As she spoke, you could see in her eyes the pains and the search for answers about the problems with Nigeria – opportunities lost, gross misappropriation of national wealth, endemic corruption, failure by national leaders to make a positive impact on the lives of the people, and endless competition by the upper class to plunder national resources.  

The image of Nigeria as it exists in her mind today, she said, looks like a fictional account of a jungle where only the fittest survived. What she knows about Nigeria today represents the exact opposite of what she experienced in the country just three decades ago. It was sad listening to this narrative about the social, economic and political disintegration of the entity we refer to as Nigeria. As I waited for her to end, she launched into nostalgic stories about the good times in Nigeria.  

I couldn’t resist but listen further. In the history of any nation, there are good times and bad times. In Nigeria, it seems we are more familiar with the bad times. Here’s an opportunity for me to hear a foreigner’s account of the good times in Nigeria. Introspectively, the American woman said the good times in Nigeria in the 1970s were driven by the unprecedented oil wealth and other factors. She identified two major events that impacted on the international image of Nigeria, including the lives of the citizens in the 1970s. The Festival of African Arts and Culture (“FESTAC 77”) and the Udoji award stand out in her recollections.  

For those too young to know, the Udoji Award was a decision made by the Yakubu Gowon’s federal government to award civil servants unprecedented salary increases in 1974/1975 following the recommendations made by a panel headed by a man named Jerome Udoji. FESTAC 77, as it was known and as we were informed by the military leaders of the time, was celebrated to showcase black and African arts, civilisation and culture. Although it is more than 30 years since the two events were marked, debate persists in Nigeria on whether FESTAC 1977 and the Udoji Award of 1974/1975 helped to improve or impoverish the lives of the people and how the world perceives the nation.  

In the true spirit of Eldorado that pervaded Nigeria in the 1970s, Yakubu Gowon, as Head of State, decided it was time for civil servants to be rewarded with a special salary increment. In January 1975 the Federal Government endorsed and implemented the salary increment which was a part of the recommendations made by the Jerome Udoji panel that examined “Public Service Organisation, Management and Remuneration” in Nigeria. .  

When workers received their salary increment, the nation was in a celebration mood. It marked the beginning of our love for acquisition of household electronics, entertainment gadgets and non-stop weekend street parties. Civil servants spent a lot of money on luxury goods and they still had a lot left in their bank accounts. Remember the popular refrain, somewhat exaggerated but nevertheless attributed to Gowon: money was not Nigeria’s problem but what to do with the national wealth was the main problem. If national leaders knew anything about economics, they would have understood that bad financial management, whether it comes in the form of an unparalleled salary increase, is never the best way to manage an economy. Thirty three years after the Udoji Award, the nation’s problems have multiplied rather than eased. Do our leaders ever listen?  

Two years after the Udoji Award, FESTAC was celebrated in 1977 with so much fanfare and passion. Lagos and other major cities bustled with a large influx of visitors from across the globe. The streets were adorned with FESTAC symbol and special buses were imported in large numbers to improve transportation. The airwaves were filled with radio jingles about FESTAC 77. A FESTAC village was built in Lagos, in that part of the city now referred to as Festac Town. Leading and budding artistes, entertainers and intellectuals came from across the world to celebrate with a nation. It did not matter that the country was under military dictatorship. The world had not yet warmed up to the evil effects of military rule in Africa or elsewhere for that matter.  

Nigeria had oil money. Everything went alright for the country. Poverty was not a term that international financial institutions associated with Nigeria. The local currency enjoyed a measure of recognition across western Europe and North America. In Paris, London, Frankfurt and other European cities, international exchange rates favoured anyone with a pocketful of naira. The country had so much money that it could afford to host the entire world and still remain economically buoyant. When you have so much money (it doesn’t matter whether that wealth was derived from one source – oil), the world tends to listen to, and respect, you.  

The good times affected every aspect of Nigeria and the Nigerian life. Other than pockets of armed robbery incidents and the usual pickpockets that operated in popular bus stops, violent crime was not much of a problem. There was no need for the police to create a special unit -- “Operation Fire for Fire”, for example -- to tackle violent crimes. Even the architecture of residential homes and apartments reflected the mood of the time.  

Doors and windows in many homes were not strengthened with heavy metal to forestall forced entry by armed robbers. People did not build houses that looked like fortresses because there was no need to do so. In the 1970s Nigeria was in a carnival mood or so it seemed. You didn’t go to sleep at night with one eye open and wads of naira note under your pillow, in anticipation of that dreaded knock on your door by armed robbers, as is the case today. 

But good times don’t last forever, the American woman reminded me. Nigeria, she suggested, has changed for the worst. Compare life in Nigeria in the 1970s to life in Nigeria in the first decade of the 21st century. The difference is clear, she concluded.  

As the woman rounded up her reflections on Nigeria, she returned again to the three questions she posed at the beginning. What has happened to Nigeria? Why did a nation so blessed squander so much wealth and gamble away many opportunities in so short a time? Why did Nigeria spit out a great opportunity to become a world leader? She looked at me straight in the eyes for an answer, as if I held the answers somewhere in my shirt pocket. I told her that if she needed frank and unexpurgated answers to the questions, she must confront Nigerian military and political leaders, including everyone who has held positions of responsibility since the attainment of independence in 1960.

 




RobotRobot is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 1

As soon as she opened my file, the woman asked politely whether I was from Nigeria. My response trig...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 18.07.2008 07:34

Reply Quote



DewdropsDewdrops is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 2


=Robot;4295071800>As soon as she opened my file, the woman asked politely whether I was from Nigeria. My response trig...Read the full article.





Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm! Nigeria matter na no go area this morning. I will yield to members of the floor while I entertain myself elsewhere in this villge.

Thank you Robot.:)

I prefer your articles to those of all those "Anonymousessss" in this village. At least we know who you are. You do not attack people.:D

Next please.

Posted by Dewdrops| 18.07.2008 09:15

Reply Quote



IshoIsho is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 3


she must confront Nigerian military and political leaders, including everyone who has held positions of responsibility since the attainment of independence in 1960.



Yes, those are the people responsible for the downfall of Nigeria, though the sad thing was, the late 70s was "Ali must go" when we have desperate and enthusiast student unions, sadly enough the student then are in Government now.....

Segun Okeowo & Co. where are you?

Posted by Isho| 18.07.2008 12:45

Reply Quote



Omowa2Omowa2 is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 4

Doctor Levi,


I have the answers to your questions. I may not score an A grade but I will give this my best shot.
What happened to Nigeria can happen to any country with so much resources. As you know Nigeria has not never been a geo-political space of want. The rule of probability operates in that place. We have produced the best thieves just as we have wonderful commanders in Chiefs. We have great writers and great painters. I cannot recall who once expressed that development in one part of the world is under-development in other parts. The inability of Nigeria to transition from the comfortable traditional way of life to an inhuman modern system is one of the reasons. Please do not tell me countries with similar demography like us without bringing in the factor of ethnic diversity that tears us apart when it has the great potential to make us the envy of the world. If there is a way in which we can be both traditional and modern at the same time Nigeria will be great. But I do not see how that is possible. The lords of modernity have a pre-condition that traditional ways/belief is a hindrance to modern development. For instance should we do away with our traditional rulers or find relevance for them in a modern set-up. We have not been able to solve that issue. They earn without adding value to national productivity in very explicit ways. One can go on and on with examples of our mixing and matching. We are neither Shoko nor Shaka we are Shakashoko which does not pay any human being.

I am so happy that your Doctor used the word GAMBLE...yes like life we took a risk and lost all. The gamble to have a capitalist society where our cultural status can be preserved has turned out to be a wrong choice. All ethnic groups in Nigeria need the disparity between the rich and poor, the talakawas and the Maigidas, the Osu and the non-Osus...to have an egalitarian society will hurt that age long arrangement. The alternative would have been to level our society by nationalizing the means of production so that more and more people will have access to funds for production. We took a risk and see how like playing pools we live on hope that tomorrow will be better. No it may just be bitter. Ok to you historians here come up with societies that took the same turn and have come out the better for it. I have been around too many Nigerians and I can tell you we are intolerant of the poor. Most Nigerians love to be hailed as ogas and all others must know their level. Can drivers be treated like human beings? Can house maids have the same opportunities?

Dear Doctor, I know that a hospital chair is not the best to proffer a workable solution to such a cerebral question. The military just took over from where traditional warriors left off, the politicians are reincarnations of traditional King makers. There is nothing new under our sun ...go read Okey Ndibe's Arrow of Rain and learn how vocations transmute from one generation to another. How a grand-father town crier gave birth to a letter-writer Son and the son gave birth to a Journalist/activist child. Let us start to learn about where the rain started to beat us. Our problems are more structural and rooted in our cultural belief system and watered by the global unfairness of wealth distribution. Once Nigeria gets her acts together Britain will never be at ease. The cheap cheese and easy life will be replaced with hardship. Countries that have most of us as cheap labour will never feel at ease. How one wishes that a new form of education can "happen" in out institutions.
Nigeria took the wrong turns NOT because our leaders were evil but that was what looked attractive at that time and even now FEAR of living on the same level with fellow human beings drives most of our irrational actions. When next you talk to Nigerians in the Diaspora, ask the individuals where they lived before they escaped to USA or to NZ or to Australia. Most lived in Mushin, Ajegunle, Badiya hardly will you find those who lived in Ikoyi here...my brother the problem of our country is more complex than asking those who once held leadership positions...I know responding to a Levi is worse than talking to the deaf. But I thank you for this opportunity. I hope others can lets reflect on this question?
Omowa

Posted by Omowa2| 18.07.2008 15:56

Reply Quote



NWANZANWANZA is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 5


As the woman rounded up her reflections on Nigeria, she returned again to the three questions she posed at the beginning. What has happened to Nigeria? Why did a nation so blessed squander so much wealth and gamble away many opportunities in so short a time? Why did Nigeria spit out a great opportunity to become a world leader? She looked at me straight in the eyes for an answer, as if I held the answers somewhere in my shirt pocket. I told her that if she needed frank and unexpurgated answers to the questions, she must confront Nigerian military and political leaders, including everyone who has held positions of responsibility since the attainment of independence in 1960.



I have been asking these same questions - although I know when, where, and how we derailed from being a country of endless dreams, to a country in darkness.

Posted by NWANZA| 18.07.2008 23:50

Reply Quote



bobokitebobokite is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 6

The problem with Nigeria is that we have embraced corruption as a way of life. Everybody in Nigeria is Corrpupt. I doubt if you will get one or even half person in Nigeria that is not corrupt. Unless the psyche of nigerians is changed that corruption is not a way of life, We wont make any headway from now till thy kingdom come This is our problem!

Posted by bobokite| 19.07.2008 00:41

Reply Quote



Anambra MovementAnambra Movement is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 7


=bobokite;4295072233>The problem with Nigeria is that we have embraced corruption as a way of life. Everybody in Nigeria is Corrpupt. I doubt if you will get one or even half person in Nigeria that is not corrupt.QUOTE>

Well, you got it very wrong. This is the view of naive, ill informed people. You can't say that because of osama bin laden, that all moslems are terrorist. Or will you?

Posted by Anambra Movement| 19.07.2008 01:58

Reply Quote



bobokitebobokite is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 8


=Anambra Movement;4295072251>
=bobokite;4295072233>The problem with Nigeria is that we have embraced corruption as a way of life. Everybody in Nigeria is Corrpupt. I doubt if you will get one or even half person in Nigeria that is not corrupt.QUOTE>

Well, you got it very wrong. This is the view of naive, ill informed people. You can't say that because of osama bin laden, that all moslems are terrorist. Or will you?



My brother, this is not the view of a naïve person but the simple truth about Nigeria. The politicians, teachers, lecturers, students, civil servants, business men, traders, the clergy, e.t.c, Every body is corrupt in Nigeria and that is our problem.

Posted by bobokite| 19.07.2008 08:37

Reply Quote



BOEBOE is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 9


As she spoke, you could see in her eyes the pains and the search for answers about the problems with Nigeria

You could see all of that in her dark eyes???

Posted by BOE| 19.07.2008 09:02

Reply Quote



AgidimolajaAgidimolaja is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 10

Anambra Movement,

While all moslems may not be terrorists per se,all terrorists are however moslems!

Posted by Agidimolaja| 19.07.2008 22:44

Reply Quote


 
< Prev   Next >

Services : E-mail news | RSS Feeds | Podcasts
Links:   About the NVS | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies | Advertise With Us
All Rights Reserved. NigeriaVillageSquare.com